Four regional nations eye 25 million tourists

Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar and Vietnam, often referred to as CLMV, are looking
to attract 25 million foreign tourists in 2015, up by 12.7 million against
2011.

The four nations have agreed to join hands in investment, promotion,
personnel training, product development, and transport connectivity in a bid to
accomplish this goal.

This was announced by senior tourism officials of the four countries last
Friday, after the first CLMV Tourism Ministerial Conference and the signing of
a cooperation deal in 2013-2015. Among the targeted 25 million international
tourist arrivals, some four million could come from regional countries, up from
the 1.9 million recorded last year.

Thong Khon, Cambodian minister of tourism, said this is an ambitious target,
so the four countries’ tourism authorities must boost cooperation to make the
region an attractive destination for tourists. “We need to develop and promote
our products, and call for support of the governments for connecting the
transport systems to lure visitors,” he said.

In an effort to attract tourists, CLMV are considering a common visa scheme
for international tourists to travel through the four countries. Thereafter,
CLMV will work with Thailand over this scheme.

“We are preparing to test issue a common visa for those visiting Cambodia
and Thailand. Once this plan produces positive results, we can extend this to
the five countries,” said Thong Khon.

Hoang Tuan Anh, Vietnam’s minister of culture, sports and tourism, said that
under the cooperation agreement for the 2013-2015 period, the four nations
would be jointly organizing tourism promotion events in Europe, the U.S., South
Korea and Japan, and participating in some other international events.

The ministers have proposed the governments accelerate the process of
building infrastructure for tourism development.

“For ten years now, Vietnam’s Government has spent trillions of dong
building tourism infrastructure and this process is still underway. The other
countries, such as Cambodia, have done the same. This effort will help the
tourism authorities in the region achieve the goal,” he said.

After the first CLMV Tourism Ministerial Conference held in HCMC, the four
countries will take turns to host the annual event. The 2013 event will take
place in Cambodia.

Speaking to the Daily on the sidelines of the tourism ministerial
conference, Thong Khon said the number of tourists from Vietnam to Cambodia
would hit a record high this year, at around 800,000 versus 660,000 in
2011.

Vietnamese tourists mainly travel to Cambodia by road, with the favorite
destinations being Phnom Penh and Angkor Wat in Siem Reap. At present, some 239
passenger coaches travel across the seven border gates between the two
countries a day.

“In the first seven months of 2012, we got 400,000 visitors from Vietnam.
This is the biggest source market for Cambodia,” he said.

Cambodia’s tourism authority has made strong investments to attract tourists
from Vietnam. At the 2012 International Travel Expo in HCMC, the neighboring
country spent about US$150,000-170,000 setting up a 135-square-meter booth,
featuring a lot of activities for partners and customers.

Cambodia was the biggest delegation joining the expo, with 170 people and 27
tour operators. Last Thursday, Cambodia organized an event called Cambodian
Night to introduce the country’s culture and tourism, and receive hundreds of
Vietnamese and foreign travel firms.

Thong Khon added around 400,000 Cambodians came to Vietnam last year, mainly
for medical treatment.